News

News

Wool prices have dropped sharply in the past few months, reflecting sharply lower demand and comes despite the lower volumes of wool available from Australia. The fall in demand is illustrated by the decline in the volume of wool exported by the five major wool exporting countries (Australia, New Zealand, Argentina, South Africa and Uruguay). For the first eight months of 2019, total wool exports from these five countries were 11% lower than for the same period in 2018. At just 352 mkg greasy, it is the lowest total export volume from these countries for a year to August at least since 2009 (which is when my databases start) and probably for many years before that. The largest decline is for South Africa, the result of the ban on imports of South African wool by China due to the Foot-and-Mouth Disease outbreak. As you know, Australia’s wool production has been hit hard by drought in many parts of the country, which has contributed to the 13% decline for the 12 months to August. But demand has also weakened. New Zealand’s wool exports were down by 10%, even though its production was 2.5% lower in 2018/19 and is expected to be 1% higher this season. Argentina’s exports were down by 8% and Uruguay’s wool exports were 9% lower.

All the major processing countries have contributed to the decline in demand for raw wool. Exports of raw wool to China dropped by 16% for the 12 months to August 2019, with the volume of wool well below the level since at least 2009. The other major processing countries also recorded declines in wool volumes imported, with drops of 14% for India, 18% for Italy, and 16% for the Czech Republic. ‘Other Europe’ saw a smaller 3% decline courtesy of increased exports to Bulgaria. Exports to ‘Other’ countries fell by just 4% due to better exports to Thailand and East Asia.

Further details are given in the full edition of this week’s NCWSBA Weekly Newsletter. This includes a chart showing the trends in the % change year-on-year in the 12-month moving aggregate of exports from each of the five countries and a second Chart showing the trends in imports by the major processing countries. Available to NCWSBA members.

NCWSBA Logo Welcome

National Council of Wool Selling Brokers of Australia Logo

 

The National Council of Wool Selling Brokers of Australia

News – 2015-current

National Council of Wool Selling Brokers of Australia Logo

Login

Register

You need to enable user registration from User Manager/Options in the backend of Joomla before this module will activate.